No wonder the kids never smile….

You just dont see the women here much… they’re not out and about you know.  They must be hiding in their houses doing ‘women’s work’ and attempting to avoid notice.  And when you do see one… they’re covered from head to toe even though its in the high 30s at the moment.  Being stuck in the Cantonment has given me a bit of time to think about the lives of the women here…….

.   In the Punjab, fathers, brothers and husbands subject up to 82% of women to domestic violence.  Wife battering is so common it is not even considered a form of violence.  If women make a complaint of domestic violence they are more often then not advised to reconcile with the perprators as filing a complaint will bring dishonour onto the woman – which can have fatal consequences.

.   The Human Rights Commission estimates that a rape occurs every three hours in Pakistan with sexual violence and sexual assault on women being one of the most common crimes here.  This is apparently a conservative estimate as most incidences go unreported and rape within marrigage is never reported.

.   At most social functions, husbands and wives will arrive together but the men will congregate in one room (or area) and the wives in another.  Neither mingles socially and will only pair back up again when it is time to leave.

.   There are hardly any women in down town Quetta’s shopping district – women being out to shop would involve giving women money 😐   Women dont risk going out unaccompanied as very innocent interactions with non-related males can cause strife.

.   Even in their homes, the men and male offspring will eat at a separate table from the wife and female children.  Visiting foreign women can expect to be seated at the women’s table if having dinner at a Pakistani home.

.   Under the Qasas law, women can be handed over along with money and lands as compensation to a family who have suffered an assination/murder at the hands of the woman’s male relatives.

.   At the Embassy party on the weekend, many of the Pakistani officers are refusing to bring their wives because UK Mark’s wife will not be present.  They had asked UK Mark to alter the invitations to exclude the Pakistani wives as it was improper to invite them when there is no hostess to look after them at the event.

.   In rural areas, 90% of women will work in the fields, with their entire bodies covered and working under the watchful eye of their male relatives to ensure no immodesty or impropriety occurs.

.   Pakistani men can not understand a relationship like my friendship with MD.  You are either wife, sister, or relative of some sort.  There is no concept of female friend at all.  Men do not and cannot have female friends.  Period.

.   Women are unable to make decisions for their own lives, as they are considered psychologically not as strong as men, and prone to being foolish simply because they are women.  😐

.    There are no women’s toilets at the Staff College… so even though the Western Allies could send a female officer here.. the Pakistani Army is not equipped to deal with a female officer in the college.  Never mind that they would dismiss anything she ever had to say!

.   Wealthier landowners (all things being relative) have been known to have their female relatives ‘Married to the Holdy Qu’ran’, a practice which means a woman is unable to marry a man in her lifetime.  It is a common practice in Sindh and basically means the landowner is able to keep any possessions, land or money that might have belonged to his female relative.

.    Young women on the Cantonment can do things like go to the gymnasium or go horse riding (they ride astride).  Most of these things will cease entirely once they are married and take up duties in the home.  Such activities are not for married women.

.   MD’s colleagues (other students – mostly Pakistanis) are unable to comprehend that MD’s Commanding Officers in his previous two postings were both women.  Firstly they have a problem with the concept of women in the military at all.  Secondarily they don’t believe a woman can be competent enough to make an officer’s rank and thirdly, they don’t believe men would take orders from a woman.

.   In a court of law, a woman’s testiment is considered a half witness.. that her word is worth half as much as a man’s testimony.  There is no point in a woman pursuing a charge against a man in court unless she has corroborating witnesses.  It takes four male witnesses to testify to a rape case… and the victim cannot testify.  Where no witnesses are present, it is assumed that the incident was consentual and thereby exposing the woman to adultery charges and dishonour.

.   There is a swimming pool on the Cantonment with specific women’s swimming times and men’s swimming times.  There is a half hour break between allocated times – when the pool is empty to ensure no overlap.  The women tend to swim fully clothed and there are men with machine guns posted to keep peeping toms away.

.    Jurg, the house servant who does the laundry modestly folds and hides my ‘smalls’ (bras and knickers) in between the other items of laundry so I dont have to recognize that he has seen my underthings and touched them. πŸ™‚  He also hides my jeans and pants by hanging them under shirts in the closet.  Women dont have legs.

.   When I have managed to sleep in later than MD and he goes off to work leaving me to have my breakfast alone.   In MD’s absence, my breakfast will be still laid out by Shahid to the right hand side of the head of the table… women dont sit at the head of the table…. that is Sab’s chair and Mem’sab can’t sit in Sab’s place.

.   Last year approximtely 286 REPORTED Karo Kari honour killings saw Pakistani women murdered by their own male relatives for either actual or perceived improprieties.  Some of these incidents are motivated by other things (land or money), but a man can get a lighter sentence for a murder if he claims it was honour related.

I have a feeling that all this is probably the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the sort of subjugated position that women have in Pakistani society.  I have read some academic articles about the status of women in Islam, and nowhere does it indicate that women should be treated like this….  Even though Islam does not dictate this gender discrimination…. you certainly get the impression that due to traditional cultural conventions, every little part of a woman’s life is totally controlled by the men in their families… first their fathers, possibly their brothers, then their husbands and occasionally their sons.    The children here, particularly the girls have nothing to look foward to, but a life of fear and repression – perhaps being surrounded by this environment explains why the children never seem to smile….

And after compiling all that – I recognize I have never been happier to be a western whore…….

PS: these are not my photos – I have not seen enough women in the streets to get pics yet!

Tell me what you think